Samuel Beckett is perhaps
most well-known to the general public as the author of a play about nothing.
'But nothing happens... in
the end, no one turns up... nothing happens.'
We can argue over the merit
of his theatrical work until the sun turns blue, but what is undoubted is his
importance to 20th century literature.
Beckett's writing was a game changer, and according to the opinions of many,
we're still struggling with how to respond to his output (Joshua Ferris
believes that the novel as a form began with Cervantes' Don Quixote and ended with Beckett's 'Trilogy').
What is often overlooked is
Samuel Beckett as a prose writer - Samuel Beckett the novelist.
And what gets buried even further from the greater public consciousness, is his
earlier work, where his unique brand of comedy sprouted originally.
His scattershot, dry, Irish
humour is seen on stages worldwide most nights, but we're lacking in screen
adaptations. His work is intimidating - if novelists struggle in his shadow,
how could one dare attempt to translate his prose to celluloid and digital...
Well I think we can go back to the beginning almost, and with his earlier
fiction, create something with the character-comedy of Peep Show or Black
Books, and the existential wonderings (with the occasional slapstick) of The
Sopranos.
Samuel Beckett's 1938
novel - Murphy
Murphy
was Beckett's second published work of fiction (following his hilarious
collection of short stories, More Pricks Than Kicks) and first picked up
novel. Unlike his later work, and his general shift towards a
more minimalistic aesthetic, Murphy is audacious and expansive.
And at the centre of Murphy
is, rather appropriately, Murphy - serial shirker and procrastinator, a 'hero'
in the mould of Oblomov
and Russian literature’s 'superfluous man'.
Murphy does not work, indeed, he has no desire to and considers employment
as analogous to death: 'In the mercantile gehenna [...] to which your words
invite me-'
If, like most, you have no
idea what is meant by 'mercantile gehenna' - Gehenna, in the Hebrew Bible, was
a site where apostate Israelites and worshippers of pagan gods would sacrifice
their children by fire.
Clearly, Murphy has a low
opinion of the nine-to-five routine.
He would rather spend his
days locked up in his London flat, strapped naked to a rocking-chair, rolling
forwards and backwards in masturbatory fashion, hoping that he can somehow
totally escape inwards, within himself, into the blissful ‘will-lessness’ of
his own mind, away from REAL LIFE.
Murphy is in essence, the classic
'comedy-of-the-lowlife', and this is central to the novel's enduring appeal. It
is quite possibly the closest piece of fiction there is to the bumbling
nothingness of Withnail and I.
The comedy is suitably hectic
in parts, such as the Dublin sections - latterly in London - where Neary, his
drunkard man-servant Cooper, Wylie and Murphy's spurned lover Miss Counihan,
argue amongst eachother and plot the downfall of Murphy (if only they could
find the bastard...).
But Beckett crafts a subtle
warmth, core to the text, in the figure of Celia - an Irish prostitute-immigrant
who wants to settle down with the feckless Murphy, and leave behind her less
than desirable profession.
That she ultimately can't,
due to Murphy's solipsistic battle with the question of whether there is any real
greater meaning to anything, to living, delivers the tragedy in this farcical
comedy.
Murphy's end (accidental
self-immolation, yeah...) is as blackly grotesque as one would expect from
Beckett, there is no heroic denouement for our protagonist.
But the final scene, where Celia
takes her aged grandfather (who is also her pimp, it’s never black-and-white
with Sam Beckett) kite flying at Round Pond in Kensington Gardens, would be a
marvel of modern television - tragic, poignant and wonderful.
The relative brevity of the
novel (just shy of 160 pages), would allow for it to be developed into a
cracking three-part mini-series, in the manner of Hugo Blick's dramas on the
BBC (such as his excellent, The Shadow Line).
And with Irish actors being killed off quicker in Game of Thrones than ants in
a garden, there would be no trouble in finding a suitable cast to gallivant
around central Dublin and west London. Just imagine if they could coax Jack Gleeson from his bizarre retirement to take on
Murphy...
Basically, it'd be a great
BBC Two thing at 11pm on a few Sundays in a row; in association with Canal Plus
or HBO or some other foreign risk taker. I'm sure it would be heralded loudly,
but watched by few - as the best shows always happen to be.